This DIY guide features cost-saving strategies for stockpiling emergency supplies so you can be fully prepared without breaking the bank!You need to get prepared before disaster strikes. But supplies can be expensive. This book solves that problem. It’s chock full of inexpensive DIY projects for keeping your family safe in a wide range of disaster and emergency scenarios. Expert prepper Bernie Carr’s smart and frugal approach shows you how to stay on a stable financial footing while fully preparing for any life-threatening situations. The Penny-Pinching Prepper offers dozens of affordable and easy-to-implement solutions, including how • Stock a Prepper pantry on $10 a week• Build a stove from used tin cans• Create a water filter with two free 5-gallon buckets• Craft a lamp that burns inexpensive vegetable oil• Devise a storm shelter using 10-cent trash bags
i won this from the goodread website, in a giveaway.
this is a nice little book. it goes over some of the basic prep needs, giving the beginner a quick and dirty guide to what they will need to do in an emergency. it gives money-saving advice on how to prep without breaking the bank. what i enjoyed the most, however, was the numerous recipes for do it yourself preps. diy soaps, stoves, latrines, first-aid supplies, toothpaste, fire-starters, etc etc. all very good information presented in a clean, brisk writing style. the author seems to have done her homework, and has been at this for a little while. she peppers a few personal stories in there, and they illustrate her points very well. a few of the stories (how the power went off at work, how she got locked out of the security gate due to power outage) illustrated some common problems that few of us thing about dealing with during an emergency. overall, i would consider this an invaluable introduction for a person asking themselves if they should prep or, if so, how they can get started.
i would recommend this book because, if nothing else, it causes you to think, 'what if this happened to me? am i ready?' a lot of the advice and illustrations offered here would sober us into realizing that most of us are not ready. but we can be, with just a little hard work and patience. without breaking the bank.
A relatively short, easy to read book, packed with good, common sense information. Carr's approach is relatively low-key; she's not on a stump warning that the world is about to end, but instead is gently reminding us that stuff happens and it's important to be ready when it does. From weather emergencies to power outages, getting lost in the woods or having to evacuate a city, Carr's approach is thorough. I'm not too enthusiastic about the recipes and formulas she included -- I'd rather just buy a year's worth of soap and candles than go to the trouble of making them, for example -- but I skimmed over those bits while making a mental note that it's a good idea to have some extra soap and candles on hand. Lots to think about here, and steps you can start taking today to get by in an emergency tomorrow.